Item Description: Decent Books, New Delhi, 2001. Paperback. Book Condition: Fine. . (illustrator). First edition. 15 x 23 cm. The Land of Kashmir, celebrated as paradise on earth for its scenic beauty, has an equally enchanting historical and cultural past: this is the place symbolising India`s cultural unity, where different cultures have prospered at different times, where scholars from all over India and the distant lands of Mesopotamia, Persia and China converged to imbibe learning in ancient times. The author, S. Sapru here unravels the glorious past of Kashmir; he discusses its importance as the centre of Sanskrit learning in the bygone eras; its achievements in music, dance, drama, sculpture, language and literature, and philosophy -- marked by the artistic and literary contributions of eminent men like Jayaditta, Bhatta, Jayadhara, Pingala and Abhinavagupta. Referring to various historical works and combining facts with legend, folklore and impressions from oral traditions, he presents a graphic picture of life and times in the valley in the past that deals with a range of themes like the land`s mythology, statecraft, trade links, urban centres, tax system, system of crime and punishment and an ancient tourist`s impressions of the valley. Through a smooth-flowing narrative that makes the book extremely readable, the author points out that there is more to Kashmir than the present-day spate of violence; the land and its people have an essential `Indianness` common to other people of India and Kashmir`s links with the rest of India cannot be severed. Book Contents Foreword Preface 1. The Killing Fields of Kashmir 2. Beauty and Violence 3. Looking Closely at the Head 4. A Seat of Ancient Learning 5. Where did the Kashmiris Come From ? 6. A Symbol of India`s Cultural Unity 7. Centres of Excellence 8. Their Literary and Artistic Achievements 9. Aesthetics -- The Fragrance of Life 10. Folklore is the Spice of Life 11. Manmadhan`s Arrows don`t Spare Even Kings 12. Will Manmadhan Fail ? 13. Fine Arts Need no Frontiers 14. If Music be the Food of Love, Then Play on 15. A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words 16. Etched in Stone, they sing silently 17. The Arrow that Boomeranged 18. A Wedding at Mount Kailash 19. Narada -- Scribe Extraordinary 20. Rationalising the Rituals 21. The Thread that Joins us Together 22. Celebrating What, When and Why? 23. Valley and the Empire 24. Is Civilisation Only Urban? 25. An Anciet Tourist`s Impressions 26. Enter the Dragon 27. Trust in God, She will Provide 28. The Nuts and Bolts of Statecraft 29. Timeless Wonders, our Villages 30. Manning the Ramparts 31. The Curse of Taxes 32. Whose Money is it Anyway? 33. Trade Links Across the World 34. Crime, Justice and Punishment 35. The Generation Gap (Indian Style) 36. Kashmir Shaivism and the Southern Link 37. Spreading the Buddha`s Gospel : The India-China Link Bibliography Index Printed Pages: 184. Bookseller Inventory # 1233

Item Description: Penguin Classics, 2010. Book Condition: Used. This Book is in Good Condition. Clean Copy With Light Amount of Wear. 100% Guaranteed. Summary: Preface. Introduction. I. BRACING FOR GLOBALIZATION. 1. Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh, Helena Norberg-Hodge. 2. The Homogenization of Culture, Richard J. Barnet and John Cavanagh. 3. The Politics of the Real World: Hope, Fear, and the New Century, Michael Jacobs and The Real World Coalition. II. SOCIAL INEQUALITIES. Global Inequality. 4. Imperialism 101, Michael Parenti. Class Inequality. 5. Children and Poverty in America, James Garbarino. 6. As Long as They Can Sell Their Blood, Linda McQuaig. Inequalities of Race and Gender. 7. The Black Poor and the Politics of Expendability, Barbara Ransby. 8. Affirmative Action, Deborah L. Rhode. 9. Women and Welfare Reform, Mimi Abramovitz. 10. Female Genital Mutilation: A Reproductive Health Concern, Karungaru Kiragu. III. PROBLEMS OF THE FAMILY. 11. The American Family and the Nostalgia Trap, Stephanie Coontz. 12. Family Policy in Sweden: Lessons for the United States, Ruth Sidel. IV. PROBLEMS IN EDUCATION. 13. Where Children Rule, Nicholas D. Kristof. 14. U.S. and German Youths: Unemployment and the Transition from School to Work, Robert J. Gitter and Markus Scheuer. V. CHANGES AND PROBLEMS IN THE WORKPLACE. 15. Job Availability: Achilles Heel of Welfare Reform, Katherine S. Newman. 16. McDonald's: We Do It All for You, Barbara Garson. 17. The Maquiladora Revolution in Guatemala, Kurt Petersen. 18. Immigration Dilemmas, Richard Rothstein. 19. A Global New Deal, Richard J. Barnet and John Cavanagh. VI. PROBLEMS IN HEALTH CARE AND PROBLEMS OF THE ELDERLY. 20. Canada's Health Insurance and Ours: The Real Lessons, the Big Choices, Theodore R. Marmor and Jerry L. Mashaw. 21. Primary Care in Cuba: A Public Health Approach, Karen A. Swanson, Janice M. Swanson, Ayesha Gill, and Chris Welter. 22. The Microeconomics of AIDS Epidemic in Africa, Tomas Philipson and Richard A. Posner. 23. Japan and the United States Struggle with Who Will Take Care of Our Aging Parents, Viola M. Lechner and Masahito Sasaki. 24. The Elderly at Home in Norway, Merl C. Hokenstad. VII. CRIME AND DEVIANCE. 25. Lessons in Order, David H. Bayley. 26. Crime and Criminal Justice in the United States: Views from Outside the United States, Robert Heiner. 27. Alone Among Its Peers: The United States' Refusal to Join the International Movement to Abolish Capital Punishment, Lawrence D. Wood. 28. Rx Drugs, 60 Minutes. 29. Homosexual Behavior in Cross-Cultural Perspective, J.M. Carrier. 30. Schizophrenia in the Third World, Richard Warner. VIII. PROBLEMS OF POPULATION AND OF THE ENVIRONMENT. 31. An Ecology of Mind: Tribal Wisdom and the Modern World, David Maybury-Lewis. 32. Slicing Up the Rainforest on Your Breakfast Cereal, John Vandermeer and Ivette Perfecto. 33. Overpopulation as a Propaganda Device, Bill Weinberg. 34. Creative Destruction: Capitalist Development and China's Environment, Richard Smith. EPILOGUE. 35. If the GDP Is Up, Why Is America Down? Clifford Cobb, Ted Halstead, and Jonathan Rowe. Bookseller Inventory # ABE_book_usedgood_0143106163

Item Description: Theclassics.Us, United States, 2013. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 246 x 189 mm. Language: English Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1896 edition. Excerpt: . the case of a concubine are less severe than in the case of a wife. Marriage is called hun-yin; to marry a husband is chia-fu for wife and concubine alike (J fc nan hun nil chia, the man marries, the wife takes a husband). Compare the Italian casare. 5.--Relation Of Husband And Wife To Each Other. Through the marriage the wife becomes, as was the case according to the law before Justinian,76 not only uxor but comes also into the mantis mariti. She ceases to be sui juris, if she ever was it, and leaves the patria potestas, if she stood under it.77 It is in consequence of the way in which the wife comes into the power of her husband that she acquires very few rights with the marriage. Though she shares the rank and honours of her husband,78 she has no right to demand conjugal fidelity from him,70 whilst she, by sinning against it, commits a heinous crime. It is a cause for divorce if the wife beats her husband a case probably as rare in China as with us, and, when it happens, more likely to be quietly endured than brought into court, but the husband has the right to inflict corporal punishment on her. He is, however, punishable if by doing this he inflicts a wound; but he escapes with a fine if he and his wife are willing to be divorced. 16 See Mackeldey, Lehrb. dcs rom. R., 14th ed., 11, p. 266; compare Gaji Iiutit., 49, 108 ss., II, 86 as. Mackeldey, I.e., II, p. 274, note; Gaj. List., Ill, 14, 24. As the Roman uxor shared the dignitag mariti. Unlike the Romans Nor., 117, c. 9, 5: liceat mulieri propter hanc etiam causam matrimonium dissolvere. In ancient times the Chinese husband s adultery was punished by castration?flj fu-hsliuj). The wife owes the husband implicit obedience, and is not. Bookseller Inventory # APC9781230386317

Item Description: Theclassics.Us, United States, 2013. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 246 x 189 mm. Language: English Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1896 edition. Excerpt: . the case of a concubine are less severe than in the case of a wife. Marriage is called hun-yin; to marry a husband is chia-fu for wife and concubine alike (J fc nan hun nil chia, the man marries, the wife takes a husband). Compare the Italian casare. 5.--Relation Of Husband And Wife To Each Other. Through the marriage the wife becomes, as was the case according to the law before Justinian,76 not only uxor but comes also into the mantis mariti. She ceases to be sui juris, if she ever was it, and leaves the patria potestas, if she stood under it.77 It is in consequence of the way in which the wife comes into the power of her husband that she acquires very few rights with the marriage. Though she shares the rank and honours of her husband,78 she has no right to demand conjugal fidelity from him,70 whilst she, by sinning against it, commits a heinous crime. It is a cause for divorce if the wife beats her husband a case probably as rare in China as with us, and, when it happens, more likely to be quietly endured than brought into court, but the husband has the right to inflict corporal punishment on her. He is, however, punishable if by doing this he inflicts a wound; but he escapes with a fine if he and his wife are willing to be divorced. 16 See Mackeldey, Lehrb. dcs rom. R., 14th ed., 11, p. 266; compare Gaji Iiutit., 49, 108 ss., II, 86 as. Mackeldey, I.e., II, p. 274, note; Gaj. List., Ill, 14, 24. As the Roman uxor shared the dignitag mariti. Unlike the Romans Nor., 117, c. 9, 5: liceat mulieri propter hanc etiam causam matrimonium dissolvere. In ancient times the Chinese husband s adultery was punished by castration?flj fu-hsliuj). The wife owes the husband implicit obedience, and is not. Bookseller Inventory # APC9781230386317

Item Description: TheClassics.us. Paperback. Book Condition: New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 20 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.0in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1896 edition. Excerpt: . . . the case of a concubine are less severe than in the case of a wife. Marriage is called j hun-yin; to marry a husband is chia-fu for wife and concubine alike (J fc nan hun nil chia, the man marries, the wife takes a husband). Compare the Italian casare. 5. --Relation Of Husband And Wife To Each Other. Through the marriage the wife becomes, as was the case according to the law before Justinian, 76 not only uxor but comes also into the mantis mariti. She ceases to be sui juris, if she ever was it, and leaves the patria potestas, if she stood under it. 77 It is in consequence of the way in which the wife comes into the power of her husband that she acquires very few rights with the marriage. Though she shares the rank and honours of her husband, 78 she has no right to demand conjugal fidelity from him, 70 whilst she, by sinning against it, commits a heinous crime. It is a cause for divorce if the wife beats her husband a case probably as rare in China as with us, and, when it happens, more likely to be quietly endured than brought into court, but the husband has the right to inflict corporal punishment on her. He is, however, punishable if by doing this he inflicts a wound; but he escapes with a fine if he and his wife are willing to be divorced. 16 See Mackeldey, Lehrb. dcs rom. R. , 14th ed. , 11, p. 266; compare Gaji Iiutit. , 49, 108 ss. , II, 86 as. Mackeldey, I. e. , II, p. 274, note; Gaj. List. , Ill, 14, 24. As the Roman uxor shared the dignitag mariti. Unlike the Romans Nor. , 117, c. 9, 5: liceat mulieri propter hanc etiam causam matrimonium dissolvere. In ancient times the Chinese husbands adultery was punished by castrationflj fu-hsliuj). The wife owes the husband implicit obedience, and is not. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN. Paperback. Bookseller Inventory # 9781230386317

Item Description: Reliance, 2002. Hardcover. Book Condition: As New. The crime and criminals are as old as the human civilization and with the surge in crime the laws were formed and enacted by various rulers of the land. Any act punishable by law is a crime, and its scientific study criminology. The references about medical testimony and punishment can be found in Vedas and Manusmriti. The Vedas prohibited abortion, Manu forbade the execution of pregnant women and enjoined the statements of insane, of the drunk and the children. The code of Hammurabi, ruler of Babylon (2000 BC) was the first feather in the cap of the history of legal medicine. The code regulated medical practice and laid down punishment for physicians who failed in their duties, similar codes have also been conformed to have existed in ancient China, India, Persia, Rome, Egypt etc. The ‘Constituto Criminalis Carolina (1532) by Charles-V, the Roman emperor can be ragarded as the dawn of legal medicine. Definition and explanations of criminal acts are subject to variations from place to place. The constitution of law or process of law making reflect social behaviour. Particular criminal laws have identifiable antecedents; reasons exists for the emergence of laws at some particular time or in some specific place. The lawyers, Police personnel, researchers and students of law will find this encyclopaedia most useful." (jacket). Bookseller Inventory # 43896

Item Description: Houghton Mifflin, Boston, MA, 1985. Hardcover. Book Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Lui, Patrick (illustrator). First Edition. 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall. This book takes you, the reader, into China, exploring the private lives of individual families, the work of the villages, the problems and successes of factories and mines, and the closed world of the country's courts, hospitals, asylums, and prisons - a rare look at areas that will once again be closed to public view. The volume also examines ancient religions and philosophies that the Chinese, with their unique flexibility, have interwoven with the doctrines of Marx and Mao. Also explored is China's renowned cooking, science, and art, which have been brought to the rest of mankind by travelers and traders from the time of Marco Polo. Well-researched with elegant prose and stunning illustrations - some which have never been seen outside of China - this book combines a wide range of historical and contemporary sources. Illustrated in color and black & white. One corner of the binding has light wear. The jacket is worn on all corners and spine ends. There is a small piece missing from the spine top and a few small, repaired tears. Jacket is in a protective cover. Bookseller Inventory # 003875

Item Description: University Of California Press, 2004. paperback. Book Condition: Very Good In Wrappers. Berkeley. 2004. University Of California Press. 1st Paperback Edition. Very Good In Wrappers. A Philip E. Lilienthal Book in Asian Studies. 409 pages. paperback. 0520238737. keywords: History Literature China. inventory # 35400. FROM THE PUBLISHER - In ancient China a monster called Taowu was known for both its vicious nature and its power to see the past and the future. Over the centuries Taowu underwent many incarnations until it became identifiable with history itself. Since the seventeenth century, fictive accounts of history have accommodated themselves to the monstrous nature of Taowu. Moving effortlessly across the entire twentieth-century literary landscape, David Der-wei Wang delineates the many meanings of Chinese violence and its literary manifestations. Taking into account the campaigns of violence and brutality that have rocked generations of Chinese–often in the name of enlightenment, rationality, and utopian plenitude–this book places its arguments along two related axes: history and representation, modernity and monstrosity. Wang considers modern Chinese history as a complex of geopolitical, ethnic, gendered, and personal articulations of bygone and ongoing events. His discussion ranges from the politics of decapitation to the poetics of suicide, and from the typology of hunger and starvation to the technology of crime and punishment. David Der-wei Wang is Dean Lung Professor of Chinese Studies at Columbia University. He is the author of Fin-de-Siècle Splendor: Repressed Modernity of Late Qing Fiction, 1849—1911 (1997) and Fictional Realism in Twentieth-Century China: Mao Dun, Lao She, Shen Congwen (1992). He is the coeditor of Chinese Literature in the Second Half of a Modern Century: A Critical Survey (2000). . Bookseller Inventory # 35400

Item Description: Orchid Press Publishing Limited, Thailand, 2008. Hardback. Book Condition: New. Bilingual. 251 x 183 mm. Language: English Brand New Book. The T ang-Yin-Pi-Shih is a record of 144 criminal and civil court cases, judged in the courts of ancient China, spanning a period of some 1,400 years of the country s history from around 300 BCE. During this period, China s judiciary was chosen from among the ranks of the country s scholar-officials, who, dispatched to various parts of the Empire often with little or no prior training in the legal arts, fulfilled the role of both investigative detective and court judge in the provincial centres of the land. Casebooks such as the T ang-Yin-Pi-Shih were thus essential tools of the appointees, providing guidance and precedence to which to refer, when the courts were confronted with challenging cases. Bookseller Inventory # AAT9789745240919

Item Description: Orchid Press, 2007. Book Condition: Used. This Book is in Good Condition. Clean Copy With Light Amount of Wear. 100% Guaranteed. Summary: Fascinating glimpse into the world of traditional Chinese judicial systems through this record of 144 criminal and court cases, judged in courts of ancient China; entertaining and informative. Bookseller Inventory # ABE_book_usedgood_9745240915

Item Description: University of California Press, United States, 2004. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 226 x 150 mm. Language: English Brand New Book. In ancient China a monster called Taowu was known for both its vicious nature and its power to see the past and the future. Over the centuries Taowu underwent many incarnations until it became identifiable with history itself. Since the seventeenth century, fictive accounts of history have accommodated themselves to the monstrous nature of Taowu. Moving effortlessly across the entire twentieth-century literary landscape, David Der-wei Wang delineates the many meanings of Chinese violence and its literary manifestations. Taking into account the campaigns of violence and brutality that have rocked generations of Chinese - often in the name of enlightenment, rationality, and utopian plenitude - this book places its arguments along two related axes: history and representation, modernity and monstrosity. Wang considers modern Chinese history as a complex of geopolitical, ethnic, gendered, and personal articulations of bygone and ongoing events. His discussion ranges from the politics of decapitation to the poetics of suicide, and from the typology of hunger and starvation to the technology of crime and punishment. Bookseller Inventory # AAH9780520238732

Item Description: University of California Press, United States, 2004. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 226 x 150 mm. Language: English Brand New Book. In ancient China a monster called Taowu was known for both its vicious nature and its power to see the past and the future. Over the centuries Taowu underwent many incarnations until it became identifiable with history itself. Since the seventeenth century, fictive accounts of history have accommodated themselves to the monstrous nature of Taowu. Moving effortlessly across the entire twentieth-century literary landscape, David Der-wei Wang delineates the many meanings of Chinese violence and its literary manifestations. Taking into account the campaigns of violence and brutality that have rocked generations of Chinese - often in the name of enlightenment, rationality, and utopian plenitude - this book places its arguments along two related axes: history and representation, modernity and monstrosity. Wang considers modern Chinese history as a complex of geopolitical, ethnic, gendered, and personal articulations of bygone and ongoing events. His discussion ranges from the politics of decapitation to the poetics of suicide, and from the typology of hunger and starvation to the technology of crime and punishment. Bookseller Inventory # AAH9780520238732

Item Description: Orchid Press Publishing Limited, Thailand, 2008. Hardback. Book Condition: New. Bilingual. 251 x 183 mm. Language: English Brand New Book. The T ang-Yin-Pi-Shih is a record of 144 criminal and civil court cases, judged in the courts of ancient China, spanning a period of some 1,400 years of the country s history from around 300 BCE. During this period, China s judiciary was chosen from among the ranks of the country s scholar-officials, who, dispatched to various parts of the Empire often with little or no prior training in the legal arts, fulfilled the role of both investigative detective and court judge in the provincial centres of the land. Casebooks such as the T ang-Yin-Pi-Shih were thus essential tools of the appointees, providing guidance and precedence to which to refer, when the courts were confronted with challenging cases. Bookseller Inventory # AAZ9789745240919

Item Description: AUGUST HOUSE PUB INC, 2005. Paperback. Book Condition: New. 13.87 x 21.34 cm. lawyer and storyteller presents an international collection of folklore--from ancient Greece, Morocco, Germany, China, and Ireland--that provides insights into our conception of justice, crime and punishment, and other legal issues Our orders are sent from our warehouse locally or directly from our international distributors to allow us to offer you the best possible price and delivery time. Book. Bookseller Inventory # MM-00442714

Item Description: paperback. Book Condition: Good. Ship out in 2 business day, And Fast shipping, Free Tracking number will be provided after the shipment.Paperback. Pub Date :2012-03-01 Pages: 152 Publisher: the Anhui Normal Basic information title: the teenagers happy moment Books: reading activities broaden our horizons Original Price: 16.9 yuan Author: Wang Jianguo Press: Anhui Normal Publication Date: 2012 - 03-01ISBN: 9787811416244 Words: Page: 152 Edition: 1 Binding: Folio: 16 Weight: Editor's Summary Youth Kaixinyike Series: broaden our horizons reading activities from the subject matter or the form. style. are more typical variety. Youth Kaixinyike Series: broaden our horizons reading activities close to real life. has a certain appeal. highlighting the theme of happy reading . but it has some educational value. Enables readers happy I can also learn from the experiences and lessons of life and work. Write demon write a pioneer for directory Chinese fiction historical novel - Romance of the Three Kingdoms peasant uprising textbooks - Water Margin imaginative carnival - Journey to the West - A Dream of Red Mansions in the first Masterpieces of Ancient and Modern China ghost Gaorenyichou - Strange herald of modern Chinese literature - Lu Xun 's first modern the lengthy masterpiece - off peak Midnight torrent - home inspiring idyll - Border Town feast of language - Assassins. bagged book Great Legends the - Wesley Series to follow the eternal masterpiece - grass house acclaimed masterpiece of suspense - the eye in the sky foreign fiction criticism pioneer work of realism - The Red and the Black romantic milestone - Notre Dame de Paris greatest critical realistic masterpiece - Europe also ni Grandet fascinating paladin novel - Three Musketeers Willful allies and enemies recorded - The Count of Monte Cristo cleansing the soul of a pool of water purification - John Christopher swept the world of adventure novels - Robinson Crusoe picaresque novel masterpiece - The Pickwick Papers feminist totem pole - Jane Eyre romantic tragedy - detective fiction classic Wuthering Heights - the salvation of the soul of the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Crime and Punishment emotional moral awakening - Resurrection to affect generations inspirational classic the humorist children - How to Make Steel novel - Tom Sawyer and Adventures dedicated. loyal and diligent management book - - letter to Garcia love epic masterpiece - Gone with the Wind can be destroyed and can not be overcome - The Old Man and the Sea puberty Reading - The Catcher in the Rye dumbfounding masterpiece - Tong Quixote examine the human soul - Unbearable Lightness diary style children's novels - Rascal Diary the foreign drama humbling tragedy - Snow in Midsummer sublime love history - - The West Chamber Romantic love monument - The Peony Pavilion Chinese drama milestone - by ancient metaphor of the historical drama Thunderstorm - Qu Yuan drama in the history of a model - Teahouse or Not to Be - - Hamlet humor and irony Masters - George Bernard Shaw drama great question mark - A Doll's House celebrity biography of the American spirit Primer - Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin shocking biography of the human mind - Three Days to light. Hero Symphony - Celebrities the bud fairy fable soul - the hearts of children around the world of Hans Christian Andersen's Reading . poetry the Wenfu the popular science books cultural education of Abstracts preamble Bacon said: On the ditch and reading is sufficient Yee love. enough to draw upon. and for ability . Histories make men wise. poets witty. makes thorough mathematical. scientific deep. moral grave. logic and rhetoric able to contend; Where what they have learned. are into the character. This shows that reading is how important the ages. a broad array of books in the elect and read. often overwhelming; especially in the high-speed development. the era of rapid change. impetuous people. materialism expansion. development of information Television. the network has become some. Bookseller Inventory # FW064556

Item Description: paperback. Book Condition: New. Paperback. Pub Date :2005-01-01 Pages: 193 Publisher: Guangxi Normal University sheets: 6.5 Introduction book story from Mesopotamia. Greece. India. China. and France's ancient history naked woman next to about the relationship with the water. showing the most original perfect picture of a naked woman bathing. a new interpretation of a woman's nude its original beauty. Which also runs through the mystery and taboo. the secular and the sacred. the theme of crime and punishment. love and loy. Bookseller Inventory # CI051171

Item Description: paperback. Book Condition: New. Ship out in 2 business day, And Fast shipping, Free Tracking number will be provided after the shipment.Paperback. Pub Date :2012-09-01 Publisher: China Economic Press Note: If you are required qq 794153166 (sending staples bibliography). the number of books is greater than the the bookstore inventory you can promptly inform the treasurer Phone 15801427360 Contact bookstore internal transfer cargo -2 days in place. The OUR Books brand new genuine absolute guarantee. when you sign must seriously view the parcel. satisfaction after receipt books. not satisfied directly refusal. this can save Returns cost and time. the problems caused due to reasons of bookstores all unconditional return policy. Thank you for your visit. Assured orders to ensure smooth your shopping. Looking forward to your good basic information title: wholesale Bong Song List Price: 32.00 yuan Author: Yasuko Press: China Economic Press Publication Date: September 1. 2012 ISBN: 9787513616546 Words: Page : Revision: Version 1 Format: Folio: 16 commodity identification: Editor's Choice wholesale Bong Song is published by the China Economic Publishing House. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY No CONTENTS CHAPTER hidden Chamber of Secrets AD 927 when the troubled times of the wolf fell in love with a sheep on source relay Night at the second chapter of the Later Tang those years. Shi Jingtang do bastard thing the world in the first CEO of Great Liao Zhongyuan three over and over smoke signals Chapter month tour sided Guo Wei's accession to the throne Crazy Chapter Big Soldier Gaoping Jedi Every Health Wenwu are grasping with both hands the final promotion order sly chaos happiness quota step by step startling deep the Palace Phantom World Without Thieves Chapter VI long holiday ancestors Disciplines in the end like a paradise polar Commander Taiyuan! Taiyuan! Chapter VII of Clear and Present Danger King fight friends insider 1 of Chapter VIII of the fate of the blood loyal soul fate of the joke joke ideal left. reality right the other side of Sting with the ninth chapter Yidefuren good steel in edge on the Battlefield Behind tough choices CHAPTER getting too much courage strongest comedy providence people pretended happy event A true true becomes false Chapter tricks too clever clever anti cleverness Cinderella transfiguration Hutchison despise the Liue bitter Chapter 12 of the children of the sky Happy the terminus Baiguan Figure VS cronies standings blessings in disguise leaning Fu Xi disaster by volts excellence fleeting Chapter 12 fleeting people today identify what is yet to know non Shang Yang Shang Yang make government will do the ancient drive Crime and Punishment Chapter XIV Elixir of Love. Xincheng YuanFeng grudge China looks beautiful 1 looks the beautiful 2 against the war abyss of Chapter XV survivor in solid passers-come. easy go hard to to Jingzhong may not be able to serve the country Chapter XVI was born in the war died in peace in times of peace. a peace and prosperity to ruin author Yasuko. formerly known as Xue Ning. bestselling author. Writers Association. In recent years. devote themselves to the study of history. has published extensively. The existing Gate National Tsing Hua Qing Tang before behind the scenes masterpiece advent. Best Paper Award. was awarded the reader to open a column multiple female heaven and earth Yangzi Evening News and other newspapers and magazines in the female. girlfriend. has published last resort there is always an emotional let our tears learning to talk with Kevin Tsai The fate of your other arrangements timely and decisive end and Love determine the woman's life. more than 10 best-selling books. Inspirational mentor and cultural ambassador hailed by readers of contemporary youth. Digest colophon: Illustration: Gaoping of the end of World War Chairong to move rectify the Judge Advocate's mind. But he has been hesitant to bake the pie. had to lay on the the line battalion big account bed tossing and turning. Serve him ZHANG Yong s. Bookseller Inventory # FU004431

Item Description: paperback. Book Condition: New. Language:Chinese.Paperback. Publisher: China Social Sciences Press. job-related crimes. also known as post on crime or crime of breach of official duty. Ancient Chinese officials have long attached great importance to the prevention and punishment of crimes committed. Although the code does not use the ancient Chinese concept of job-related crimes. but the terms of which are large areas are job-related crimes. Severe penalties for officials to punish crimes committed is a traditional Chinese . Bookseller Inventory # B43742